The Perfect Bread

With the cost of groceries skyrocketing over the last several years, I have made it my mission to continue to feed my family of seven a wide variety of nutritious meals on a tight budget. Perhaps the most effective way that we have cut costs has been to cook from scratch as much as possible. I use dried beans, make homemade crackers, cook applesauce in my crock-pot, freeze muffins and cookies, and generally have great success and find very little need for packaged foods. For years, though, one item has proven to be my culinary Kryptonite…

Bread.

Don’t get me wrong – I have tried a seemingly endless parade of recipes, and not all of them were bad. Some were excellent, in fact. However, none of them fulfilled all of my requirements for a great everyday loaf of bread:

Must slice cleanly without turning into a pile of crumbs.

Must produce a loaf large enough to feed my family of 7 for at least one meal.

Must be versatile enough to be toast for breakfast, a sandwich for lunch, and garlic bread to serve with dinner.

Must be cheap and easy to make. Remember – I have five kids!

I started to believe that I was asking for too much (cough cough) from a single loaf of bread when I came across this recipe on Pinterest. It seemed too good to be true – a beautiful loaf of artisan style bread with just three (okay, four, but water is a freebie!) ingredients and almost no labor involved. My trepidation, however, soon turned to triumph – I had FINALLY found the perfect loaf of bread!

Not only does this loaf of bread take almost no time or effort to produce, it costs less than $1 per (HUGE!) loaf, and holds up beautifully for a variety of uses. We can finally strike “bread” from the grocery list. Give it a try – I promise you’ll be a believer!

Here’s what you’ll need:

6 cups sifted all-purpose or bread flour

2 2/3 cup cool water

½ teaspoon instant or active dry yeast

2 ½ teaspoon salt

That’s it. Really.

To Make:

Combine flour, salt, and yeast in a large bowl.

Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients and add the water.

Stir until well incorporated. The dough will be VERY sticky, but resist the urge to add extra flour.

Cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap and allow the dough to sit for 12-18 hours. I like to make mine right before starting dinner, and then bake it after breakfast the following morning.

The dough is ready for the next step when it has risen and is covered in lots of tiny bubbles.

At this point, preheat your oven and a heavy, oven-safe pot with a lid to 425 degrees.

Sprinkle the top of your dough with flour and punch it down. Form it into a tight ball, and then wrap in a tea towel. Allow the dough to rise for approximately one more hour while your oven and pot preheat.

Once your pot is screaming hot and your dough is nice and poofy, carefully plop your dough into the pot using the tea towel.

Place the lid on the pot and bake the bread for 60-80 minutes or until the internal temp reads approximately 200 degrees, or a skewer inserted into the center of the loaf comes out clean.

Stir until well incorporated. The dough will be VERY sticky, but resist the urge to add extra flour.

Cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap and allow the dough to sit for 12-18 hours. I like to make mine right before starting dinner, and then bake it after breakfast the following morning.

The dough is ready for the next step when it has risen and is covered in lots of tiny bubbles.

At this point, preheat your oven and a heavy, oven-safe pot with a lid to 425 degrees.

Sprinkle the top of your dough with flour and punch it down. Form it into a tight ball, and then wrap in a tea towel. Allow the dough to rise for approximately one more hour while your oven and pot preheat.

Once your pot is screaming hot and your dough is nice and poofy, carefully plop your dough into the pot using the tea towel.

Place the lid on the pot and bake the bread for 60-80 minutes or until the internal temp reads approximately 200 degrees, or a skewer inserted into the center of the loaf comes out clean.

I have never been happy with my bread machine loaves for some reason, Betty. I literally was about to give up on finding a loaf that was truly multipurpose when I came across this recipe. It revolutionized my life! ::grin::

I started making this bread after the first post and haven’t stopped. I love that I don’t have to block out hours of my day for it. I mix it up before I leave for work (I work in the afternoon) and when I get up in the morning I finish it – works so much better with my family’s schedule. Plus the taste and texture it awesome! Thank you for bringing this recipe to us!

Hi! This bread is great. Thank you for sharing the recipe. The dough sticks to my kitchen towel. Any advice on how to prevent this? It also stuck to my pan. It’s an old pan so maybe that’s why? I will keep trying until it’s perfect! 🙂

I have been making this bread for some time and have found many things you can add to it. I have tried a little cinnamon and raisins, garlic, or garlic and cheese are really good, too. I have also lightly kneaded in a little finely chopped spinach and feta cheese right before I baked it.! It is great with a bowl of soup for a cold winter nights supper!!